They learn
about the human mind, human development and psychological problems.
Anything everything
about human mind and consciousness.
Inquisitive
about the human mind?
curryja - When I hear a panel of the nation's leading neuro - scientists admit that they know so very little
about the human mind and are not ashamed to express some humility about their lack of complete knowledge, and then I read how so many climatologists use such absolutist terms in what is going on with our climate, it stretches credulity.
I've learned a lot
about the human mind from Dan Siegel, a psychiatrist at the Center for Culture, Brain, and Development of the U.C.L.A. School of Medicine and the author of a string of related books.
Join neuroscientist, philosopher, and best - selling author Sam Harris as he explores important and controversial questions
about the human mind, society, and current events through his podcast, Waking Up.
A great article
about human mind versus computer robot.
One of the most influential & stunning psychological experiments ever run, Dr. Zimbardo's Stanford Prison simulation revealed more
about the human mind than even he could have predicted.
Anything everything
about human mind and consciousness.
«Finding that Theory of Mind is present in birds would require us to give up a popular story as to what makes humans special, but completing this evolutionary and developmental picture will bring us much closer to figuring out what's really unique
about the human mind,» he said.
The ability to gaze inward may be an integral part of the human condition, but so is our inability to be alone, he says: «Because we're so attuned to be alert to danger, there is something
about the human mind that finds it hard to turn in on itself.»
It became the 20th century's single most influential theory
about the human mind.
Searls provides a detailed recounting of a man whose creativity and curiosity
about the human mind drove him to create a new way of «reading» people — an innovation that was quickly embraced, and misunderstood, by the masses.
How, one might ask, can quantum mechanics have anything to say
about the human mind?
lucky we will know enough
about the human mind and its full potential by 2033 that we do not have to worry about your lines of BS and Culture
This is an objective claim
about the human mind, the dynamics of social relations, and the moral order of our world.
We've learned lots
about the human mind.
Not exact matches
That was true since automobiles transformed our lifestyles while simultaneously killing thousands a day, and it's true in our current reality of
mind - bending technological progress with entrepreneurs aiming rockets at Mars and envisioning artificial intelligence that makes
humans look
about as smart a house cat in comparison.
«It's a mysterious juggling act that requires not only a thorough knowledge of the time - honored laws of the game but also an open heart, a clear
mind, and a deep curiosity
about the ways of the
human spirit.»
Daniel Pink, a contributing editor at Wired and author of the blockbuster A Whole New
Mind, has made
human motivation the subject of his new book, Drive: The Surprising Truth
about What Motivates Us.
Within that century and a half there's some good news
about the global
human condition that ought to be kept in
mind when remembering the bad news of the twentieth century and the early twenty - first.
The common image of Calvinism — and I hear it portrayed in this way often, even by people who know some things
about theology — is that the religion of John Calvin is a mean - spirited, narrow -
minded perspective where a nasty God decides to save a few people while arbitrarily consigning the vast portion of the
human race to eternal suffering.
This belief, that
human activity ought to be directed towards promoting what John Locke called «the advantages and conveniences of life,» and that the
human mind ought to concern itself exclusively with gathering together and putting in order the sort of knowledge this enterprise demanded — useful knowledge — is a moral belief, that is, it is a belief
about how we ought to spend our lives.
in reference to importance i would say
humans are
about as important to god as ants are to us; we see their value, yet don't
mind watchingt hem die.
You know, when I think
about «empire» — Roman or Egyptian or Chinese or Russian or American — and consider both accomplishments and damage inflicted (
human and otherwise), and then think
about what Christianity might have to say on the subject, the first thing that comes to
mind is «to whom much has been given, from him much will be required.»
The medieval field of alchemy — the attempt to change base metals into gold and to find the philosopher's stone capable of bringing
about human perfection, even immortality — is ludicrous to the modern
mind, a relic of a prescientific time.
I really don't see what he gains from being indifferent and idiotic
about the issue, but for the mere fact he can't make up his
mind whether
humans are a cause behind global climate changes makes me think this guy isn't fit to run the country.
It's more important because, as Hart rightly diagnoses, the modern
mind is trapped in various false dichotomies — like thinking one has to be a personal theist or an anti-theist, or that the
human person is either a ghost in a machine or a machine - generating ghost — and these false dichotomies themselves make it impossible for us to think rationally
about topics such as natural law.
It says more
about the power of the
human mind over the
human body than it does
about prayer itself.
When we stopped teaching the contemplative
mind in a systematic way
about 400 to 500 years ago, we lost the capacity to deal with paradox, inconsistency, and
human imperfection....
As described in my article on The Judeo - Christian Origin of Science» [1], science is based on specific fundamental beliefs
about the natural world, namely that matter is good, rational and contingent and open to the
human mind, and that any discoveries that may be made should be shared freely.
we understand more
about the universe than we do
about the inner workings of the
human mind.
Moreover, in his preface he states he has in no way changed his
mind about the need to follow an inductive approach to explore the «signals of transcendence» to be found in
human experience (P. ix).
That was all I said and meant but you are trying to frame me with word not said by me and I know why it is
about shutting me up for good never
mind may God make your curses blessings for me since he alone knows what's in my heart for all
humans in love of God only.?!
It was recognized fairly quickly that Gödel's Theorem might have something to say
about whether the
human mind is just a computer» Gödel himself was firmly convinced that it is not.
It evolved from constitutional traditions respecting private property and individual rights, it arose from religious teachings
about human dignity, and it sprang from the
mind of Kant.
the purpose why God allowed multiple religions to evolve and exist in the distant and even today is because our
minds intellectual capacity has increased tremendously after we became civilized
about 10,000 years go.Earlier when we were hunter gatherers our priorities was just to find food to survive, Then we became more knowlegible and our concern includes the intelle tual need to understand the meaning and purpose of our existence, so God allowed the founding and establishment of many religions by
humans to conform with their intellectual, social and educational development, Since this is not static, it contiually diversify and change to conform with their times of existince, History showed that this is continuesly improving, so the future expects changes towards Panthrotheism in accordance to His will.
'' be transformed by the renewing of your
mind» indeed and any thoughts we have
about God are not God yes, and these thoughts have
human limitation.
Therefore, when we set
about to think morally
about immigration, we do well to keep in
mind Gertrude Himmelfarb's observation
about our essential
human needs.
You don't KNOW my
mind, you don't KNOW that people do just as many good things as bad things, and you don't KNOW that the vast majority of
human beings are certainly wrong
about human evil.
So by stating that there must be a Christian presence in government you're kinda unconsciously outlining the
mind controlling hypocrisy you're indoctrinated into, of early Byzantine cultists who subverted a good religion and plugged 2000 years of pagan rituals into a philosophy that was
about love and created the most hypocritical, torturous, murderous, blasphemous, demonic and satanic era of
human history, that would have made the devil himself, if he happens to be real, enthralled and delighted at the inhuman acts perpetrated by men who's skill lay only in great fornication and great defilements, that can only be possessed by those that truly revel in the pain and the blood of the innocent.
Further, we find in him a tough -
minded realism
about the actualities of
human history as the mingling of the divine love and disordered
human love.
I think it's
mind - numblingly stupid to believe in any sort of personal god who cares
about anything we
humans do on this planet.
I'll even offer observations -
humans have manipulated existing organisms dna, created new virus and bacteria, clone animals, and attempt to create new animals - yet simple
minded folks still reject the idea that another more intelligent creature might have done the same thing and created life on earth in the same fashion while at the same time acknowledging that there is a strong likelihood of other life existing in this universe - talk
about being dumbed down and arrogant.
There are so many things that
humans will never know
about our origin because God did not design our
minds to possess such knowledge.
Here, for example, Novak reformulates his arguments
about the necessary relationship between democracy and capitalism (and vice versa), as well as his location of the cause of the wealth of nations in the creative, inventive, and entrepreneurial spirit of the
human mind.
It can be inferred with some probability that the
human mind, at any given moment, is not drastically different in size and shape from the pattern of activity in the nervous system with which at that moment it interacts, and as this activity moves
about somewhat it follows that the
mind literally moves in brain and nerves, though in ways unimaginably various and intricate.
And, if we know anything
about human nature, we know we have a desire for certainty, a fear of being wrong, a tendency to difine ourselves by our beliefs and to identify those like -
minded, the «us» of the them / us divide.
The several false ways of thinking
about God, to which we have just given attention, are in one sense only a projection from the
human mind at its worst.
Thus to talk
about «the spirit of man» was to say that
human existence is not only a matter of
mind and body, as we have represented this in our previous discussion, but is also a matter of relationship, in which there is an openness to, and a sharing in, the life of others.